That's to say, mathematics only brings high levels of exactitude to what's actually a nonmathematical idea/theory/hypothesis — Agent Smith
An exactitude that that can only be reached in a very limited practice though. An approximation is not exact, for there is no real thing corresponding to an approximation. What is the real form of that approximated? There is no exact form. Is the mathematical approximation of the electron orbitals in an iron atom the real thing? Or an approximation of them when together a zillion-fold? — Raymond
I see it from a missile guidance angle. Some have poor guidance systems (precision hundreds of meters), others are super-precise (lands within meters of the target). — Agent Smith
Btw ↪Pfhorrest
's reading seems correct based on a summary given by Tegmark in his exchange with Scott Aaronson in the comments here:
https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=1753
"Physicalist: I think there’s no “secret life sauce” distinguishing living from non-living things.
Critic: That’s an unscientific theory, since you can’t experimentally prove there’s no secret life sauce!
Integrated information theorist: I think there’s no “secret consciousness sauce” distinguishing conscious information processing systems from unconscious “zombie” ones.
Critic: That’s an unscientific theory, since you can’t experimentally prove there’s no secret consciousness sauce!
MUH advocate: I think there’s no “secret existence sauce” distinguishing physically existing mathematical structures from other mathematical structures.
Critic: That’s an unscientific theory, since you can’t experimentally prove there’s no secret existence sauce!
I think that in all three cases, the first person makes a simple Occam-style claim, and the the onus should be on critic to experimentally detect the sauce!" — Saphsin
I've only read one of Tegmark's books, but I have a general idea of "what he's talking about". I'm not sure I agree with all his speculations, but his basic notion that Reality is fundamentally mathematical makes sense to me, especially in light of Quantum Physics, where the structure of reality is a mathematical Field.According to physicist Max Tegmark, there are nothing but mathematical structures and 'the physical world' is just a nested network of mathematical structures to which we (observers) happen to belong, or inhabit. . . . This looks like hyper-Platonism to many but more like Spinozism to me. — 180 Proof
Reality is fundamentally mathematical makes sense to me, especially in light of Quantum Physics, where the structure of reality is a mathematical Field — Gnomon
a mathematical "Field" (why do you write it with a capital F?). If we are a collection of mathematical formulas, is there an isomorphism between the world of formulas as encountered around us and the mathematical formulas constituting us? Is this isomorphism a mathematical structure?constitues
Note to self -- The basic element of my Information Universe is the "Re-El" (reality element) which is a ratio between existence and non-existence (1 or 0). The universe as a whole, is continuous, but its constituent parts are discrete. — Gnomon
Hypothetical Quantum Fields consist of abstract relationships (ratios ; vectors) that are not real things but ideal mathematical "points" & "links". When those points have measurable values, the field can be assumed to be real. I capitalize the word "field" to emphasize that it is not a real object, but an abstract model of some feature of Reality. I capitalize "Reality" to emphasize that it's a mental model of what's outside your skull, not necessarily the ding an sich. :nerd:But what constitutes a mathematical "Field" (why do you write it with a capital F?). — Cornwell1
No. I don't conflate "Reality" with "Ideality", I merely compare them as hypothetical mental models, not the actual " totality of real things and events". Our models of reality are not necessarily "fantasies", but they are inherently "imaginary". So, I'd be careful about labeling Tegmark's speculations as "fantasy". It's possible that he knows something you don't. As I said in the post, I don't agree with all of his conjectures, but they seem to be based on a deep insight into Reality (objects : things) and Ideality (models ; ideas). :smile:I think that here you conflate reality with fantasy, as Tegmark seems to do. — Cornwell1
Yes. Tegmark's mathematical model of the world is an attempt to describe the "poorly understood" phenomena on the Quantum level of reality. We know pretty well what Quarks do, but have no idea what they are. We can't compare them to anything in our sensory experience of the world. The definition of a Quark, or of Superposition, sounds about as counter-intuitive as the Catholic Trinity. :joke:That idea seems to predict well, but it models phenomena that are poorly understood. — jgill
We know pretty well what Quarks do, but have no idea what they are. We can't compare them to anything in our sensory experience of the world. — Gnomon
I'd like to "view" that unitary triplet. Can you post a picture? :wink:Don't think so. Quarks can be viewed as triplets — Cornwell1
ONE QUARK IN THREE FLAVORS blueberry, strawberry and lemon-lime — Gnomon
It would seem another physicist has entered the room — jgill
The universe is mathematical (Max Tegmark et al) simply means that if you mathematize the universe, it becomes comprehensible. — Agent Smith
Most things in the universe have no corresponding mathematical structure. Only approximations will do. What's the mathematical structure of a piece of music? — Cornwell1
Most things in the universe have no corresponding mathematical structure — Cornwell1
Only approximations will do — Cornwell1
In theory, everything in the universe can be analyzed down to its mathematical structure (conceptual inter-relationships). Math is not a physical object. It is instead the logical order (organization) of things and ideas. Since Logic is not made of matter, it is only knowable to a rational mind. Even "un-cuttable" atoms & in-divisible quarks have an internal or fundamental mathematical structure. The emotional sonic structure of music is intuitive for most minds, but only rational minds can infer the logical mathematical organization of music. :nerd:What's the mathematical structure of a piece of music? — Cornwell1
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